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When a son talks on the phone to his mother, his girlfriend (or wife) should not be present or listening in. And if he talks to you on the phone, his mom should not be listening in.

This is an unhealthy dynamic. And it betrays the relationship.

It can be used (even if unintentionally) to inform you how things will be without actually telling you. It can get you upset, cause you to fight. Set you up to take on a responsibility that is not yours. Set you up to express his anger (towards his mom) for him.

Walk away when he is on the phone to her. Even if he is in the kitchen cooking with you. Turn off the stove and walk away. Do not share what little time the two of you have together with his mom. He can leave the bedroom if she calls while you both are in bed. Or you can leave.

Since I have done this, I have much more peace not knowing what dH's mother is doing. And he never tells me. Dh still tries to bring me in on it, I keep my boundaries up. I have been grifter-proofed by caring therapist(s).

It is not easy to need to keep your guard up in any relationship.

If you need to improve your relationship, start there.
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Sendhelp Feb 2022
Do they call this "triangulation?".

Maybe it is what narcissists do.
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Dear Notaslave but investor:
You could see an attorney, write up a contract and make the $35 K a second mortgage loan, payable to you as your separate property upon sale of the house. This contract should go through escrow.

Otherwise, if co-mingling funds with your boyfriend or spouse, when you separate or divorce, or just sell the house and split the proceeds 50/50, you could lose all or part of your initial investment.

Say, for example, house proceeds net $235 K. You get $117,500.
He gets $117,500. He receives the same as you do without any down payment. What if you sell it in 2-3 months? He has invested nothing but rent to get 1/2 of your down payment. Quite a gamble.

Yes, do look up "Grifters". There is a dark movie (old) by the same name. Family even scams family, and it involves murder.
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pamzimmrrt Feb 2022
This actually happened to a friend of mine, She used her son's college fund to buy a house with her fiancee, he put no $ down. "Helped" with the payments once they were in, and when they split he made her buy him out! She lost the college fund, and was saddled with mortgage she really could not afford. It's not worth it!
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NotaslavetoMIL is an excellent name.

I am promoting you today.

NotaslavetoMILorBF

Your gut feelings is right. We can go into all the why's here if you like. IF you think it worth having a rational discussion - here they are;
1. MIL got old & needs help/aides/housing whatever..
2. BF thinks a Good Son must SAVE his Mom.
3. He feels a hero being THE GOOD SON.
4. So he decides to move her in. Like that will fix ALL her health, aging, whatever...

Any action he chooses is for HIMSELF - he CANNOT choose for you.

Rational discussion can help.
Couple councelling can help.
Taking a different ACTION can help.

Say NO as loud as you need to. 🤚
If he doesn't hear you, write it down. Then have a lawyer say NO.

Or say no with your actions. Walk out👢👢

Stop the house purchase. Get back your funds.
Walk.
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rovana Feb 2022
RUN!!
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I think you are better off renting. It's not throwing away money when it gives you freedom.
You can eventually buy a house by yourself, or with a husband. Not a boyfriend. This won't end well.
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PLEASE google the term "grifters".
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Why in heaven's sake are you with this man? He obviously has no respect for you! Your own words describe him as lazy, selfish and disrespectful, his mother notwithstanding! 3 strikes and you should be out of there!

Do you really believe, after you make the $35,000 downpayment he will really make the mortgage payments? I don't! Before you dig yourself into such a deep pit there's no escaping, pack up and leave! If the sale of the house is finalized, and your name in on the mortgage, see a lawyer and make him return your 35K...if not, run, cancel the sale, even if you lose some money.

NO man is worth this.
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AlvaDeer Feb 2022
She explains in her answers and it looks to me as though despite knowing what's coming, and despite anything anyone here can say, there is no help for it. I say then, on you go knowing the problems. Please don't marry. And when Mom moves in force the sale on the home which will hopefully have appreciated. "hopefully".
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Is boyfriends plan to use you as a caregiver to gain inheritance? To be honest I skimmed your post , tooooo many RED flags here.

as I say LOOK DOWN THE LONG ROAD….

for you , I would RUN . This man should be putting you first And looking down that road , I don’t see that …

moms home is the nest egg , but who’s nest egg? Mom or sons …thru inheritance….. moms home should be used for moms care at AL…
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Back out of the sale even if you lose some deposits.
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Bigger red flag is boyfriends comment that he thinks it will be cheaper for mom to move in with them rather than him having to pay for the up keep on two households.

Even if mom sells her house you can guarantee that this selfish spend thrift senior will be broke in a year and sonny boy will have to step up to pay moms bills.

Not to mention OP is preparing for not being able to earn an income because of her own disabilities. So she will be at mercy of what boyfriends wants to do. If he stops paying the mortgage she could lose the house and her 35,000 deposit alobg with it.

What a nightmare instead of what should be a happy time in getting a home and starting a life together.
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Dear Not a Slave to anyone,
You could get an attorney and maybe -delay- the closing on the escrow, stating because your boyfriend's mother will be selling her house and increasing the down payment to $100 K, thereby returning your $35 K to you.

You will need the $35 K for upkeep, remodeling, and taxes.

Does that make any sense to you at all?

No, it makes about as much sense as moving in with your boyfriend, married or unmarried, when he thinks of you as "Selfish". He does think you are selfish?
Or did I read that in another post?

And you think he is lazy?
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lealonnie1 Feb 2022
Yes, the OP says in one of her comments, "I just think he was raised differently with different values and ideas about how to respect your elders than I was and he feel like I’m the one being selfish saying I don’t want her to stay in my bedroom when she visits or live in my house. "

I can honestly say, in all of my homes, every time an elder visited me, be it my own parents or an in law, they have NEVER stayed in MY bedroom; they have stayed in the guest bedroom where all guests should stay. If my DH called me 'selfish' for having that rule in our home, I'd say he was gaslighting me, to be honest: trying to make me feel like I was the crazy one for wanting to sleep in my own room! Just another red flag here, huh Send?
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One of the things that needs to get discussed in a "later in life" relationship is responsibilities towards adult children and elder parents.

I met my now DH when we were 48. We both had elderly but independent mother and 4 adult children between us.

We agreed that there was no way that any of them was allowed to move in. My DH tolerated one of my kids staying for occasonal weekends, but even that was pushing it.

Before you buy property with another person, their needs to be absolute agreement on ALL of this stuff, kids, parents, whatever.
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Isthisrealyreal Feb 2022
Abzu, you should tell a woman on the first date what your plans are, otherwise you are wasting her time selfishly.

Doesn't it make you wonder if your idea that being a mommy's boy might be a bit off, if every woman runs where she hears this?
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Make sure your name is not on the mortgage and you can get back any cash that you have put down.
Do not move in. Find another place to rent. Or if you can afford to purchase on your own do so.
Sign nothing.
He, if he truly loves you and values you will come to the realization that you can not nor should you be caregiver for his mom.
Her financial failings should not impact you nor your boyfriend. She needs the professional help of Debt Relief if she has outstanding debts.
I think you might be wrong in saying she can sell her house. with a Reverse Mortgage she no longer technically owns the house. (I am by no means an expert on this and I am sure others have detailed this) It is possible that you/she needs to consult an attorney.
Bottom line....RUN do not walk from this situation.
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Run away! Run away now!
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Cancel the sale, cancel the rebound boyfriend (I don't care how long you've known him), and just take care of you and your daughter. Buy a house when YOU can qualify for it on your own, or just rent.

Having him get a mortgage but not be an owner of the house opens you up to all sorts of problems. He could decide to stop paying one day, and YOU lose all the money you put down as well as your home. That'an insanely bad idea.

Notice I haven't mentioned his mother at all? She's not your problem.
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Beatty Feb 2022
Excellent advice MJ.

It also fits with Countrymouse's advice (from a different post) for when things are not working:

"Stop. Then Start again".
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Just adding my vote that you should back out now if you still can. The only reason you ever need to give to him (or anyone) as to why you don't want to be a caregiver is: because you don't want to. "No" is a sufficient answer. And it IS a red flag that he didn't feel the need to discuss it with you first. This is a relationship problem but I'm not going to get into that. You can still have a relationship with him without being financially dependent on him, but best not to be the "assumed" caregiver and inextricably financially trapped in this arrangement.
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AlvaDeer Feb 2022
It hasn't closed. They can back out. Any earnest money will be lost, and WELL lost to avoid this disaster I would think.
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You are going to gift this man 35K for a down payment, then put yourself in a situation that you depend on him to pay the mortgage?! Really? And then a strong possibility of mommy moving in? Then you are stuck to accept the inevitable, if you want the mortgage paid.

Have you at least run this arrangement by an attorney?

Mom's 100K profit from selling her home? She won't have 100K, that reverse mortgage will have to be paid off out of any proceeds.

Run, run as fast as you can.
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NotaslavetoMIL Feb 2022
She would have 100k after she sold the house and paid off the reverse mortgage. But I don’t want that money put towards my house like someone suggested, then she’d be part owner,and in my home, and thinking she’s paid for her care, that’s exactly what I don’t want. But the 100k is enough to sustain her without her moving into my house for quite a while if my BF would have a talk with her about her finances but he won’t push the subject because he thinks that is being disrespectful to her to tell her how to spend her money. My point is that if she is expecting him to bail her out of her mess and let her live with us he has every right to tell her she needs to work out a budget so she doesn’t need to ask him for money or a place to stay in the future.
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NotaSlave;

I want you to watch a movie this weekend. Moonstruck, with Cher and Nicholas Cage.

Take it very seriously.
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AlvaDeer Feb 2022
In my top 5 movies!
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Lots of responses in just a few hours!

Please heed what the commenters have said.

You know deep down what you should do. Do it.

Keep us updated.
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”I am well aware I deserve better and No man is perfect unfortunately.”

Oh, hon. This is sad. You KNOW you deserve better, but you’re shrugging it off with “oh well, nobody’s perfect”. It sounds like you’re just taking what you can get. Why? What’s keeping you there?

Prior to meeting my husband, I was with guys who I stuck with just because they were there. I settled for less because it seemed better than being alone. So what if these guys ignored what I wanted, or didn’t make me priority, and barely told me they loved me? Hey, nobody’s perfect!
Besides, it’s too scary to start over.

Yeah. I let myself be used and emotionally abused for years. All it got me was a broken heart, broken spirit and feeling 10x worse about myself. And thankful I never moved in with or invested any real money in them.

I realized my husband was a keeper because he listened to me and didn’t put anyone, including his Mom, over me.

It sounds like you’re going to close on the house and do as he wants. I hope you truly act on knowing you deserve better. This sounds like a crossroads in your relationship, and hopefully you’ll choose the best path for you.
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Is there a way to get out of closing on the house without losing your $35,000? This doesn't sound like a great idea for you. If at all avoidable do not make this move. The house is clearly not suited to your needs, though it may have been when you first saw it. Please don't set yourself up for a lifetime of anger, angst, and aggravation.
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I read through both your posts a few times. There are several red flags for consideration. You said "Once I voiced my concerns he apologized and said he didn’t think he was making it a demand" - well, he IS making a demand that has strings attached - his apology is empty since he turns around and says he doesn't thing he was making a demand. That is like an abuser who physically hits his partner, apologizes and says 'sorry'...yet keeps doing it over and over again.

Your boyfriend has shown you quite clearly he is not willing to openly and honestly talk about this situation - it is his way or no way... your needs, fears, considerations and your daughter are not part of this whole situation - which, is an indication that if this is the way it is prior then this is how it will be later. You have an responsibility for your daughter - not his mother. That is HIS responsibility - not yours. Even if you were to move in together or get married - ultimately, it is his - physically and financially.

Have him provide you with exactly 'how' he is planning to take care of his mother when he works full time. And what and how he expects you to do and take care of. But know that what is said today can easily change tomorrow. And if you are working, who will be home with his mother to take care of her? If you are already strapped for cash with the house purchase, how are you going to afford the outside caretakers to take care of his mother when no one is home except her?

Another question I have is why are you purchasing a house when you cannot truly afford it on your own? What if he leaves you and you are left with the house, the payments, the property taxes and insurance and all the maintenance? Or what if you want to leave him, but can't since you are now literally tied to a house together?

After living on this Earth for nearly 7 decades, married numerous times, seeing so much in life - both good and bad - I would highly caution you to review why you are making such a large purchase at this time with a relationship that has many unresolved and unsettling issues. You may have known this person since you were a teen, but who we are as a teenager is not who we are as we grow and experience life.

You have to approach this fully knowing that you are not going to 'make' him see anything that he doesn't want to see or keep an open mind and attitude about. That has never worked for anyone.
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There are all sorts of points that make me look over my glasses. It's the OP's capital, securing a mortgage for the boyfriend - ??? He has a fabulously well paid job but no savings for a deposit - so how much job security? And what outgoings, such that he hasn't been able to save? And they ain't married. And the only reason for the rush is that the OP hates wasting money on rent (which I do agree with, of course, but there are advantages, such as not being sewn into a financial commitment before you're ready to make it).

But the "he's a tyrannical monster forcing me to sleep on the floor and provide 24/7 care for my overweight (non-)MIL who is a financially irresponsible whinge-bag and idiot" polemic is the kind of hyperbole people are driven to when they have just had a full-blown plates-throwing row.

See also the Pallisers, fictional husband and wife, whose argument about constitutional integrity in a democracy escalates into his declaring that he will order shoes without number from a certain shoemaker in their town and her vowing to ruin the same shoemaker and drive him out of business forever. Neither is silly or cruel, so neither would do either thing.

In this real-life instance, there are serious questions to be asked in a considered manner about how best to support MIL's wellbeing and security at such a distance (or indeed whether it's best for her to stay at such a distance), especially in the light of recent information. The OP does not *really* fail to respect her boyfriend's mother, the boyfriend is not *really* going to move mother in over the OP's dead body. But there are several doubtful factors which I suspect neither the OP nor the boyfriend have thought through about their future together, and I hope it isn't wishful thinking that's driving them both on.

And I still want to know what MIL says about it.
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This sounds like a disaster movie more than a question.
I would not close on this house.
I understand there would be a financial penalty for not closing,and since it is your money, it will be your penalty, but better 10,000 flushed away than 34,000.
I would pay the penalty and I would move on. ALONE. Get a job. Raise my children. Buy a small mobile home in a nice trailer park almost free and clear and live a good life.
I think that you already knew, from what you have said, who your boyfriend is, and it is terrible decision making to have bought a home with him. I hope that you are BOTH on the deed if this goes through. I hope that you will then force the sale of this home when the Mother moves in. Legally you can do that, either party to the deed can do so. I hope meanwhile you will keep your finances separate and begin to save for what I am certain is coming, a move out.
I would not argue this issue.
I would tell him that his mother moving in would be a deal breaker. I would leave at once. I would not argue the issue.
You describe your boyfriend as lazy (10-12 hour shifts???), disrespectful, and a mommy's boy. Why you bought a home with him is to me absolutely beyond my comprehension or ability to guess.

Each of us can tell you what WE would do; what you do is entirely your own decision and we only wish the very best for you going forward.
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gladimhere Feb 2022
The large majority of the time when a contract is broken the buyer does get a deposit back. To get it back requires attorneys and court orders, etc. Nobody wants to go through that.
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I'm not sure what sort of advice you're looking for? You say your b/f is lazy and disrespectful, that he wants to move his mother into this house b/c it will be a 'blast', that he will be strapped for cash if does, however, which will leave YOU in a bind to pay the mortgage. But when you're given advice to leave him b/c the whole thing sounds like either a scam or a bad situation for YOU and your children, you jump to his defense, saying you are 'just looking for constructive ways to make it clearer to my BF that his mother is going to need care that is more involved than he thinks will be so easy to handle.' You can't do that, obviously. Your b/f wants his mother to move into this house REGARDLESS of how much care she is going to need, regardless of how much extra money it's going to cost to have her there, regardless of how 'strapped for cash' he's going to be as a result, and regardless of the fact that YOU are obviously against it, and that YOU will be the one to do the caretaking since you only work part time and he works full time. That about sums up the situation.

How you can 'convince' him of your position on this matter is to refuse to sign on the dotted line for this mortgage. In my opinion, that would be the only way to make him understand your position here.

Otherwise, you will likely move into this house, be responsible for the lions share of the mortgage, the care & management of the mother AND the upkeep of the house due to the b/f's laziness, have no room for your daughter when she comes to visit, and find yourself in an untenable position you won't know how to get OUT of.

Your best bet, imo, is not to get INTO such a position to begin with. Which is what everyone else is telling you but not what you want to hear. When a man puts his mother first, the wife or the g/f comes second, and I have no idea how you can change that mindset. Perhaps couples therapy would give you some good ideas that we are missing the mark on.

Best of luck, whatever you decide to do.
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I was in a similar situation many years ago. I ended up getting out (later), but at a significant cost to my finances and mental health. Cancel the closing and let him find a way to take care of his mother. This is a lose/lose situation for you.
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A deal breaker.
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Notaslave, when exactly did Boyfriend receive this news about his mother's financial anxieties? And what exactly has she said to you (i.e. that you know first hand) about what she wants to do next?

Blended families are tricky at the best of times and in the best of circumstances. How old is your son?
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NotaslavetoMIL Feb 2022
His mother called last week and wanted him to look into something for her because she didnt understand why she couldn’t borrow more against her house again (she did a reverse mortgage 4-5 years ago). He figured out she’d spent all of the 100k she’d gotten and that was more than the 60% of the home value, so she can’t borrow more against the house now. Now she only has her SS and Pension to live off of. She still owns her house and could sell it and have around 100k Profitt, along with her ss and pension every month. She is just scared and playing on his guilt because she doesn’t want to sell her house and all her things and move into a smaller more manageable place in her home town. But she would have to do that if she was going to be living with us anyway so my problem is why ask her to live with us when she could sell her large cluttered, unsafe home and have enough money to live somewhere more suited to her needs if she just managed her money better. He feels guilty because she acts all helpless and milks it for all its worth. He sits abs talks to her on the phone in front of me every other night this past week and a half. She makes comments about how she’d love to live here near him and see her grandkids more often. His kids live 10 hours from here and he drives to see them every month or so but they have only come here for a visit 1 time in the past 3 years, so she won’t see them more here, I think she just thinks hell take her with him when goes to see them if she already lives here. He says he’d obviously rather her live alone but he thinks it would be cheaper for her to be with us instead of him paying for her to live alone if she runs out of money. I think he’s just jumping the gun in suggesting it because she has a way to afford living alone if she’d sell her house. When I say mommas boy I mean he won’t talk to her like an adult and tell her she needs to do things differently and that he’d like to help but living with us is not in anyones best interest. He won’t have adult conversations with her that she needs, he just does whatever she guilts him into. Mind you I have never slept on the floor for her, that was just an example of how he puts her on a pedestal in my eyes. Everyone could have had there own beds when we went on vacation but because he thought she should have the master bedroom instead of a twin bed in a separate bedroom all to herself, his son who is 6ft. Tall, has to sleep on a short hard couch for the week. We slept in separate rooms on twin beds. And to top it off the room he gave her was on the second floor where she almost fell twice going up the stairs on the first day. She wanted to visit us a couple
months ago and I told him I’d fix up my sons bedroom upstairs for her that has its own bathroom and he thought I was being rude abs disrespectful because he thought we should give her OUR bedroom because it was the “best” in the house and I’ve never heard of putting your mother or father in the couples bedroom, it’s awkward abs gross to ask them to stay in your personal space
ans bed I think. Not to mention I would have had to move everything I own out of the bedroom for me to feel comfortable having her in my personal space. I was raised that guests stay in the guest room or a child’s room and you make the room look as impersonal as possible, like a hotel/spa room for when they stay so they don’t feel like they have put you out or feel uncomfortable being in you personal space. I just think he was raised differently with different values and ideas about how to respect your elders than I was and he feel like I’m the one being selfish saying I don’t want her to stay in my bedroom when she visits or live in my house. I’ve told him I understand if it was an emergency and there were no other options, but that I would be very uncomfortable with having her here for what could be years and if she needed increasing care I wouldn’t be able to take care of her.
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"He wanted me to know we might be strapped for cash if he needed to help her out was his point".

Meaning that he won't be able to pay the mortgage.

Run. Away. Now.

He might "just" be a Mama's Boy.

Or they might be professionals at doing this. I'm serious. Duping nice women into signing onto mortgages.
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Reading through again about the 'making me sleep on the floor' etc, I would even more strongly say: Run. This is an abusive relationship that will continue to harm you.
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Countrymouse Feb 2022
The OP wrote her original post in the heat of the moment. The boyfriend has not actually "made her sleep on the floor," she goes on to say only that she wouldn't put it past him, because he doesn't like to make his mother uncomfortable in any way and (as so often happens) can be rather blinkered about it.
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You are going to sign on to a mortgage that only you are putting money down on in the "hopes" that he will pay the monthly?

Your signature, YOUR debt.

Do you understand the obligation you are taking on by taking out this mortgage? Unless you can make the payments ON YOUR OWN, do not take it out.

Do you live in a community property state?

Do you have a lawyer advising you who has YOUR best interests at heart?
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